Horticulture and Natural Resources
About Plant Select ®
In recent decades, the Rocky Mountain region has become known for horticultural innovation. Rather than being an obstacle, our bright sun and crisp air are, in fact, a boon to growing plants from the high mountains and plateaus that make up so much of the world's surface. An ever expanding list of native plants -- Phlox, Eriogonum, Penstemon -- has entered the world's gardens, thanks to experimenters in our region. Yellow and purple hardy ice plants from South Africa and salvias and snow daisies from western Asia have gained popularity worldwide through the groundwork of Plant Select ® .
Plant Select ® is a cooperative program administered by Denver Botanic Gardens and Colorado State University in concert with horticulturists and nurseries throughout the Rocky Mountain region and beyond. The purpose of Plant Select ® is to seek out, identify and distribute the very best plants for landscapes and gardens from the intermountain region to the high plains.
Several plants are chosen each year that thrive in the sunny, variable conditions of Rocky Mountain gardens. These can be plants that have grown here for years and have not yet attained the popularity they deserve, known as recommended plants. Introductions represent taxa that are discovered by our cooperators. Superior forms or hybrids carefully tested over time are known as originals. Plant Select ® is at the vanguard of a bold, new plant palette that is revolutionizing the way we garden. Here are plants that thrive in both our variable winters and our hot summers. They are helping forge a truly American style of horticulture.
For photos and more information on the list. click on Plant Select
Colorado State University and Denver Botanic Gardens this week announce Plant Select choices for gardeners to consider in 2006. Plant Select is a program that finds and distributes the best plants for gardens in Colorado's high plains and other intermountain region states with similar climates.
Plant Select®For the Rocky Mountain and Plains States
Go the website and view photos of this year's plants and past year's,
click HERE
Page Updated: October 30, 2009
Webmaster: Mary Watson
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